Eight years after 9-11, the Taliban is still making threats
Baitullah Mehsud, the 35-year-old leader of the Pakistan Taliban threatened to launch an attack on Washington that would “amaze everyone in the world”. I don’t understand how eight years after the terror attacks of September 11, 2001, the Taliban is still in any position to make threats.
It boggles the mind.
What have we been doing all these years? Osama bin Laden is still at large. The Taliban was allowed to flourish and expand into neighboring Pakistan. Eight years later and they are making threats.
Comic book featuring a woman in a bikini angers Nebraska woman
Physha Svendsen, a mother in Millard, Nebraska is upset that her 6-year old son brought home a Spider-Man comic from his school library that she believes is too sexually explicit for an elementary school library. She wants it removed from the school library.
The comic in question is J. Michael Straczynski’s Amazing Spider-Man Vol.2: Revelations. It was published in collected form in 2002 and was rated “PG Ages 12+” by Marvel Comics.
I actually find myself almost agreeing with Physha Svendsen about this. What is a comic book rated “PG Ages 12+” doing in a grade school library where a vast majority of kids are not even 12 years old? Not that I think anything shown in this book is even slightly damaging or harmful to children. It features an image of Mary Jane in a bikini. Big deal.
I think that it would be better if the library had comics on the shelves that the children might actually enjoy reading. Though J. Michael Straczynski is truly a gifted writer, I don’t think he writes comics for 6-year-old children. Do 6-year-old children even have enough reading skills to read a comic book?
I’m actually surprised this type of thing doesn’t happen more often. Too many people, including librarians, think comics are just for kids. They’re not.
60 Minutes tries to scare people about the Conficker worm
Lesley Stahl did a piece last night on 60 Minutes about the Conficker virus and it was obvious from watching the segment that nobody involved in producing it knows the slightest thing about computers or Internet security.
It was actually embarrassing to watch.
At no time in the segment was it ever mentioned that the Conficker virus only affects computers using a Microsoft operating system. It doesn’t effect computers using Linux. It doesn’t effect Macs. It only affects computers running Windows.
Even than, if you are keeping up to date with security updates from Microsoft, you don’t have anything to worry about. If you are using a anti-virus such as AVG Free, you have nothing to worry about.
Fake cartoon controversy

Political cartoonist Pat Oliphant is in a bit of hot water with the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) over a cartoon he drew that they claim is “hideously anti-Semitic.”
From Raw Story:
“Pat Oliphant’s outlandish and offensive use of the Star of David in combination with Nazi-like imagery is hideously anti-Semitic,” Abraham Foxman said in a statement released Wednesday. “It employs Nazi imagery by portraying Israel as a jack-booted, goose-stepping headless apparition. The implication is of an Israeli policy without a head or a heart.”
I’m sure Mr. Foxman knows a lot more about being offended over a silly cartoon than I do, mostly because I think it’s ridiculous to be offended over a cartoon. With that said, I think his assertions are a stretch. Like it or not, the nation of Israel, for whatever reason, chose the Star of David to be their national symbol. Oliphant didn’t choose to use a sacred religious symbol to represent the nation of Israel. If Oliphant didn’t use the Star of David, the national symbol of Israel in the cartoon, what was he supposed to use?
Nazis weren’t the only group to goose-step. The Russians and every other communist army in the world goose-step too. The North Koreans still goose-step. The goose-step has become synonymous with overbearing, oppressive armies that wage war on defenseless people.
To criticize the nation of Israel does not make one anti-Semitic.
‘The Matrix’ on Blu-ray
I was perusing through the Best Buy circular this morning when when I stumbled upon an ad for a high definition Blu-ray version of The Matrix, the first movie in the popular Matrix movie triligy. It goes on sale Tusday, March 31.
I’ve been wanting to buy this on Blu-ray since first buying a Blu-ray player. The movie was available on Blu-ray up until now only in a boxed set with the other two Matrix movies, sequels that I personally would like to forget even exist. The first movie is a masterpiece. The other two are borderline awful.
I’m still not entirely convinced that Blu-ray movies are really all that much better than good old fashioned regular DVD, especially when the DVD movie is played on a player with DVD upscaling or upconversion. My Blu-ray player has it and it makes good old fashioned DVDs look great.
Hang & Level
The Hang & Level is an ingenious tool for hanging pictures on the wall. It helps eliminate any mistakes or “practice” holes when putting nails in the wall.
I normally have to do complicated (at least for me) mathematical equations before hanging pictures and I hate it. I’ve put off hanging pictures here in the new apartment since seeing this tool on the Internet. The problem is, I haven’t been able to locate one. I looked at Home Depot and Bed, Bath, and Beyond, but couldn’t find one. I’m going to look at Lowes later today and if I still cannot find one, I’ll try to just buy one online.
Tough economic times means people might be going back to dial-up Internet service
Evidently the economic crisis we find ourselves in is so bad that people might soon be ditching their pricey broadband Internet and downgrading back to dial-up. From the Chicago Tribune:
While it’s unlikely Americans will ditch broadband for dial-up en masse, there are likely to be some people who find the $20 to $50 monthly fees for DSL or cable modem broadband service to be too high, when dial-up providers such as NetZero are offering new $9.95 service plans.
I remember when I got rid of old fashioned dial-up and hooked up with Antietam Cable broadband, not only did I get blazing fast Internet, I was actually saving money. How was broadband Internet cheaper? Dial-up was costing me $25, plus, I was paying for a second phone line so that I could talk on the phone and receive phone calls while being on the Internets. That second phone line was costing me at least an extra $20. Once I switched to the more expensive $40 monthly broadband, I was able to cancel the second phone line.
Things are obviously different now in that dial-up is evidently cheaper. The article says that you can get NetZero dial-up for less than ten bucks.
The problem I have with this theory is that even in this current economic crisis, unless you’ve recently lost your job, you probably have just as much money as you had a year ago. If you have lost your job, you probably are in need of a good Internet connection than ever before. How are you supposed to find a new job if you cannot search for a job on the Internet? Also, if money is so tight, why do you still have a land-line telephone? If you really wanted to save money, I can think of no better place to start than to ditch the land line telephone and start using your cellphone exclusively.
Real football coming to Baltimore
Two of the world’s top football teams, Chelsea of the English Premier League (EPL), and A.C. Milan, from Italy’s top division, are coming to Maryland to play on exhibition in Baltimore on July 24.
I can’t begin to describe just how excited I am about this. I ordered tickets from Ticketmaster as soon as I read about it. I went ahead and purchased two of the fancy $175 VIP tickets. It allowed us to get two seats five rows up from the field along with access to the pre-game party tent before the game. It also allows us to watch both teams practice the day prior to the game. I’m not sure if we will be making the practice or not. I bought the VIP tickets because I wanted us to get the very best seats possible. When will we ever be able to see Chelsea and A.C. Milan play again? Probably never.
Chelsea is one of the teams in the EPL that I love to hate. They are owned by a Russian mobster and other than German midfielder Michael Ballack, I pretty much despise every player on Chelsea. A.C. Milan has Brazilian superstar Kaká, probably the world’s greatest football player.
We went to Washington D.C. to watch the U.S. National team defeat the Cuban National team in a qualifier for the 2010 World Cup. It was an awful game played in a run down, awful stadium. Many of the Cuban players had defected before the game. Some of the fans in attendance were making asses of themselves by throwing their expensive, watery stadium beers into the air and lighting smokes bombs every time the U.S. team scored.
Hopefully none of that crap will be going on in Baltimore.
A sundial for the XXI century

A guy takes a laser from a level, a RC servo, a micro controller, and a big chunk of white wall and creates a high-tech laser powered sundial. He also posted the instructions so that anyone can make one.
I’m tempted to make one myself. We’ve got lots and lots of big white walls in the new apartment. I’ve got a couple laser levels. I’ve also got oodles and oodles of electronics know-how. Maybe it’s just me, but it seems I’m destined to make one of these.
Let newspapers fail
Maryland Senator Benjamin Cardin wants to try to save newspapers by allowing them to restructure as nonprofits and receive tax breaks.
From Reuters:
Cardin’s Newspaper Revitalization Act would allow newspapers to operate as nonprofits for educational purposes under the U.S. tax code, giving them a similar status to public broadcasting companies.
Under this arrangement, newspapers would still be free to report on all issues, including political campaigns. But they would be prohibited from making political endorsements.
Advertising and subscription revenue would be tax exempt, and contributions to support news coverage or operations could be tax deductible.
He wants people to be able to donate money to newspapers and receive a tax deduction so newspapers can report news? Newspapers are failing because that is precisely what is supposed to happen to businesses when they are run poorly.
They are supposed to fail.
If there is a demand for local news, something else will fill the void. As they say, nature abhors a vacuum. If there is a true need for local news coverage something else will come along to satisfy the demand. That something else wont need government assistance in the form of pretending that it’s a non-profit organization.
Putting the AIG bonus mess into context
This letter appeared in today’s New York Times. It’s from Jake DeSantis, an executive vice president of the AIG’s financial products unit, to Edward M. Liddy, the chief executive of AIG. I think it helps put the whole bonus mess into context. That is, if what Mr. DeSantis is claiming in his letter is in fact correct.
I’m starting to have a real problem with all of the grandstanding that’s going on with politicians over this whole mess. Read the full article »
Should the Octo-Mom’s baby daddy pay child support?
Octo-Mom Nadya Suleman claims that the same man fathered all 14 of her children. His sperm donation was used for the first six babies and then again with the eight she just had.
She says that she will never identify who the father is. She says that he is slightly older than she is (she’s 32), that he lives in California, and he is not originally from the United States.
Good Morning America interviewed a man named Denis Beaudoin who claims he is the one who provided Suleman with the sperm. He told Good Morning America that he donated sperm to Suleman on three separate occasions.
Shouldn’t the state of California go after him for child support? The Octo-Mom was already on public assistance before having eight more babies. If it wasn’t for Beaudoin’s “donations”, Suleman would not have been able to have a doctor impregnate her via In vitro fertilisation (IVF).
Men are forced to pay child support for children they helped create all the time. Some even who had no intention of creating a baby. They were simply having casual sex. Denis Beaudoin is different. Evidently he never had sex with Nadya Suleman. His only goal was to help her become pregnant. Shouldn’t he have to help pay for all the children he helped to create?
I think he should.
The Battle of Five Armies

Behold artist Justin Gerard’s beautiful rendering of the The Battle of Five Armies from J. R. R. Tolkien’s The Hobbit. To see a much larger version, as well as lots and lots of other great pieces of art based on The Hobbit and other subjects, go to Justin’s blog.
Seeing this painting makes me want to re-read The Hobbit.
‘Battlestar Galactica’ final was a colossal disappointment
After watching the final episode of Battlestar Galactica over the weekend, I find myself wishing I hadn’t spent so much time watching the series these past few years. If I had known it was going to end like it did, I would have preferred to have spent my time watching the Weather Channel.
Seriously, it was bad.
I’ll skip the first part and get right to the end where the whole series falls off the rails. The remnants of humanity along with their Cylon friends find themselves orbiting a blue planet that you and I know as Earth. It’s approximately 150,000 years ago. The most advanced humans are living in Africa, but they don’t even have language yet.
Not even chirps, clicks, and whistles.
The humans and Cylons decide that instead of using their technology to make this new world (Earth) a better place, they are going to ditch everything they have and each go their separate ways. They collectively decide that what they all need more than anything is a “clean slate”.
They sent all of their space ships into the Sun. They will try to blend in with the primitive humans, breed with them, and tech them how to speak.
Seriously, the final hour was just awful.
AIG is using some of the bailout money to sue the government
From the New York Times:
A.I.G. sued the government last month in a bid to force it to return the payments, which stemmed in large part from its use of aggressive tax deals, some involving entities controlled by the company’s financial products unit in the Cayman Islands, Ireland, the Dutch Antilles and other offshore havens.
A.I.G. is effectively suing its majority owner, the government, which has an 80 percent stake and has poured nearly $200 billion into the insurer in a bid to avert its collapse and avoid troubling the global financial markets. The company is in effect asking for even more money, in the form of tax refunds. The suit also suggests that A.I.G. is spending taxpayer money to pursue its case, something it is legally entitled to do. Its initial claim was denied by the Internal Revenue Service last year.
And to think people thought it was rude of AIG to give $165 million in bonuses to executives after needing a massive bailout from the taxpayers.
It’s clear that those in charge over at AIG could care less about how they look to the American people. It’s a shame we couldn’t just allow AIG to fail into oblivion. If there was ever a company that deserved to cease existing, it’s AIG.
I’ll admit that there’s a part of me that’s actually looking forward to seeing what AIG will pull next.
How is Cleveland a state?
If you’re living in a cave and that cave does not have cable, you might not be aware that the NCAA men’s basketball tournament is going on. Part of the tournament’s appeal is when schools that nobody has ever heard of beat teams that everyone knows. It happened on Friday when the 13th-seeded Cleveland State Vikings dominated the fourth-seeded Wake Forest 84-69 in a Midwest Regional first-round game.
I don’t know what is more surprising – that there is a school named Cleveland State or that they are known as the Vikings. I didn’t think Ohio, let alone Cleveland, had any connection to the Viking heritage. And how exactly can a school use the same of a city followed by the word “state”? I realize that the name Ohio State was already taken, but couldn’t they come up with something different?
Alex Rodriguez must think he’s a parakeet

Yankees star Alex Rodriguez appears in a photo spread in Details magazine (no, I don’t subscribe) where he is shown doing some rather peculiar things, including kissing his own image in a mirror like he’s a lonely parakeet. The difference is that parakeets don’t do steroids and they don’t date aging pop singers.
Doesn’t he have people working for him that should be telling him not to do stuff like this? This is just weird, even for A-Rod. It just looks like two guys kissing.
Not that there is anything wrong with that.
Celebrating Wolverine’s 35th anniversary with art

Marvel Comics is celebrating the 35th anniversary of Wolverine by declaring April as Wolverine Art Appreciation Month. Various covers of Marvel titles will feature variant covers based on well known pieces of art spotlighting the popular clawed Canadian mutant.
I didn’t know that the 35th anniversary was an important one.
Link (Tor)
That’s why I don’t give money to hobos
The way politicians are responding to the news that AIG gave out $165 million in executive bonuses is really kind of embarrassing. What exactly did they think was going to happen when they agreed to handout all that money to AIG?
I realize that $165 million seems like a lot of money and normally it is. The problem is, when you compare it to the $173 billion in tax money given to AIG in the form of a bailout, it’s not really all that much.
That works out to be less than .095%.
Putting that into some kind of context, it would be like me giving a hobo $100 and then getting pissy when I see him spend nine cents on a single cigarette. If I’m going to get all bent out of shape and claim moral outrage with how he spends the money I gave him, I probably shouldn’t have given him any in the first place.
I think it’s stupid to give money to hobos. They don’t make very good decisions, especially with their money. I also think it was stupid to give $173 billion to AIG for exactly the the same reason. They don’t make very good decisions with their money.
Animation on Blu-ray: is there a difference?
When the Watchmen motion comic was released on March 3rd, I found myself wondering which version I should purchase. Should I buy the high-definition Blu-ray version or the regular DVD version? Would I really see a difference between to the two formats?
I went ahead and picked up the Blu-ray version.
I’ll be perfectly honest and admit that I sometimes can’t tell a difference in quality between Blu-ray and regular DVD. Not that I’ve watched the same movie in each format side-by-side. That would be a fun experiment to stage, if it were at all possible.
When I moved from VHS to DVD, I noticed a huge difference in quality. When I moved from cassette tape to CD, I noticed a huge difference. When I moved from regular definition TV to high definition TV, I noticed a huge difference. When I moved from DVD to Blu-ray, I didn’t really see much of a difference.
I can only imagine that an animated movie with a limited spectrum of colors will have even a less pronounced difference in quality than a live-action motion picture.
I noticed recently at Suncoast that the Japanese anime classic Akira is now available in the high-def, Blu-ray format. Would I notice the difference between it and the DVD version I already own?
The Sci-Fi Channel changes it’s logo

They have got to be kidding. The Sci-Fi Channel is changing it’s logo form the nice looking one featuring a planet to one without a planet. Not only are they removing the planet, but they are changing “Sci Fi” to read “SyFy”.
Why would they do this?
If syphilis was traded on the NASDAQ, SYFY would be it’s symbol.
Darth Vader has prostate cancer

Darth Vader shows Princess Leia how the doctor checks for prostate cancer
He expects to make a full recovery.
Prostate cancer is very common. I’ve read that if a man lives long enough, chances are good he will develop prostate cancer. He might not know it, and it might not be what kills him, but there is a good chance his prostate will be cancerous.
Don Geronimo is on Twitter
Former co-host of The Don and Mike Show, Washington D.C. radio legend Don Geronimo (real name Mike Source) might not be on the radio right now, but he’s on Twitter.
He “retired” from the radio last year. He left the Don and Mike Show and evidently he signed a no-compete contract with CBS Radio that prohibits him from doing radio right now. In fact, he wrote on a recent Twitter post that he cannot even do a podcast.
I’m enjoying reading his frequent Twitter updates. I’d rather hear him on the radio, but I’ll take what I can get.
Saint Patricks Day
Today is Saint Patricks Day. Some of my most favorite things in the world are Irish. Guinness beer, Enya, and the greatest rock band of all time, U2.
Yes, that’s right. I said that U2 is the greatest rock band of all time. Deal with it.
I once made the mistake of being in New York City on Saint Patricks Day. What a mistake that was. I’ve never seen so many red headed, pale skinned drunks in my life. The fact that it was the middle of the workday didn’t seem to make any of them think twice about getting their drunk on.
Harlan Ellison sues Paramount and the WGA
Science Fiction writer Harlan Ellison is suing both Paramount and the Writers Guild of America (WGA) over the original Star Trek episode City on the Edge of Forever.
From ICv2:
Harlan Ellison filed suit on Friday against Paramount and the Writers Guild of America over the Ellison script for the Star Trek episode City on the Edge of Forever. Ellison alleged that he has received no accounting or payment from Paramount for uses of his teleplay, and that the WGA has failed to act on his behalf on the issue.
Among the uses of the script for which Ellison wants compensation from Paramount are a trilogy of paperbacks, the Crucible series, which use elements of the script, and a Hallmark Christmas ornament in which a character speaks lines from the episode.
Ellison is asking only $1 (plus fees) from the WGA, with which he’s been closely associated throughout his career.
Ellison described his motivation with his typical élan. “…[A]t the moment some studio mouthpiece calls me a mooch, and says I’m only pursuing this legal retribution to get into their ‘deep pockets,’ tell ‘m Ellison snarled back, ‘F*****in’-A damn skippy,’” the announcement of his suit said. “I’m no hypocrite. It ain’t about the ‘principle,’ friend, it’s about the MONEY! Pay Me! Am I doing this for other writers, for Mom (still dead), and apple pie! Hell no! I’m doing it for the 35-year-long disrespect and the money!”
City on the Edge of Forever is my favorite original Star Trek episode. Ellison wrote the original script, but it had to be rewritten many times before it was used on the show. If I remember correctly, Ellison’s original story involved a drug dealer that escapes from the Enterprise and goes back in time and alters the time-line resulting in the Enterprise becoming a pirate ship. Not a old fashioned wooden sailing ship from the 18th century, but a space pirate ship.
I’m not familiar with the Crucible series of Star Trek novels, but evidently the stories involve time travel and use the City on the Edge of Forever’s Guardian of Forever device. If that’s true, they wouldn’t be the first Star Trek novels to use the Guardian of Forever device. Peter David’s Imzadi also featured the Guardian of Forever device.
Why is Ellison not suing for that?
Sometimes I have to remind myself that Ellison is above all, a science fiction writer. I tend to just think of him as just a guy that enjoys suing people for dumb reasons. Has anyone ever been sued over a Hallmark Christmas ornament before? Is this what some mean when they talk about a supposed war on Christmas?
A copy of the lawsuit can be read here.
‘Watchmen’ has a disappointing second week
From Box Office Mojo:
Watchmen disintegrated 67 percent to an estimated $18.1 million for $86 million in ten days, trailing all previous superhero movies that debuted in the $50 million range through the same point. For perspective, 300, which Watchmen was oft compared to, fell 54 percent to $32.9 million in its second weekend (for a $129.2 million total), and, among major comic book movies, only Hellboy II: The Golden Army and Hulk had steeper drop-offs.
I figured (more or less ) that this would happen when I watched it last week. People that wanted to see Watchmen went the first week. Those who liked the movie and wanted to see it again know that it will likely see a DVD release sooner rather than later. When a substantial amount of money is spent promoting a movie for theatrical release and the movie fails to break even at the box office, studios generally tend to release movies on DVD fairly quickly. The longer they wait, the more money they have to spend promoting the movie all over again.
Personally, I cannot wait for Watchmen to be released on Blu-ray. I agree with fellow Hagerstown-area blogger Steve Shives in that I think it’s the finest superhero movie ever made.
I guess this means Watchmen will be the first and last nearly three-hour, R-rated superhero movie and maybe that’s not such a terrible thing. What other superhero story could be turned into an R-rated movie, The Boys? Please.
AIG to shower executives with tens of millions of dollars in new bonuses

American International Group is giving its executives tens of millions of dollars in new bonuses even though it received a taxpayer bailout of more than $170 billion dollars.
AIG is paying out the executive bonuses to meet a Sunday deadline, but the troubled insurance giant has agreed to administration requests to restrain future payments.
The Treasury Department determined that the government did not have the legal authority to block the current payments by the company. AIG declared earlier this month that it had suffered a loss of $61.7 billion for the fourth quarter of last year, the largest corporate loss in history.
The government did not have the legal authority to block AIG from paying out Bonuses? The government did not have the legal authority to invade and then occupy Iraq. That didn’t stop them.
Forgetting for a moment how hypocritical it is to ask for a handout from the government and then turn around and spend money of something as unnecessary as bonuses for executives, just what is AIG trying to accomplish by giving out bonuses? Bonuses are normally given out to reward exceptional performance, performance that exceeds the norm. AIG supposedly lost $61.7 billion in one quarter. Are we supposed to believe that if it wasn’t for the exceptional performance of it’s executives, AIG would have lost more money then $61.7 billion?
I don’t think so.
Former WWE wrestler Andrew “Test” Martin found dead

From the Associated Press:
Authorities say former professional wrestler Andrew Martin, who was known as “Test” and “The Punisher” to fans, has died at his Tampa home. He was 33.
The former World Wrestling Entertainment champion was found dead at his apartment Friday night. Police say a neighbor reported that she could see into his apartment window and that Martin appeared motionless for several hours.
Police say there was no indication of foul play. A cause of death will be determined after an autopsy.
During his time with Stamford, Conn.-based World Wrestling Entertainment, Martin held the Intercontinental, European and Hardcore belts. He was also a tag-team champion.
Martin most recently worked for TNA Wrestling under the name “The Punisher.”
Yet another former wrestler is now dead. Sometimes I think the soldiers who hit the beach at Normandy had a better life expectancy then wrestlers who’ve ever worked for Vince McMahon.
Anthony Cumia appeared on Howard Stern in 1994
Did you know that Anthony Cumia from the Opie and Anthony Show once appeared on the Howard Stern Show? I had no idea. He appeared on Howard’s show back in December 1994 for some kind of impression contest.
He was contestant #7.
I found this video by pure accident. I was looking for something else when I stumbled upon this.
Sirius XM to roll out iPhone and iPod Touch app
Soon Sirius XM subscribers will be able to listen to Sirius XM content on either their Apple iPhone or their Apple iPod Touch through a free app that will be available in the iTunes store. Apple iPhone users will be able to stream content over the AT&T 3G network. Apple iPod Touch users will be able to stream content over a Wi-Fi Internet network.
Currently Sirius XM has over 19 million subscribers and Apple has over 7 million iPhone users.
I think this signals a shift in strategy for Sirius XM. For a while now it seemed as though they were concentrating their efforts on gaining new subscribers by getting automakers to install their radios in new vehicles. The problem with that of course is that people are not buying new cars. Another problem is that Circuit City is no longer in business. Circuit City sold a lot of satellite radios. In fact, every satellite radio I have ever owned was bought at a Circuit City.
I think this means I will have to break down and buy an iPod Touch.
You mean they haven’t already canceled ‘Heroes’?
Evidently the suits over at NBC haven’t already pulled the plug on what was once one of my favorite TV shows, Heroes.
I used to love the show, but something happened and everything changed. What changed to make me not enjoy the show anymore?
The entire second season.
I of course wasn’t smart enough to realize just how bad the show was until I had suffered through the second season and then began to watch the third. It wasn’t until then that I realized the show had spiraled into a big flaming bag of dog poo.
I stopped watching Heroes and I guess I just assumed everyone else did too. I guess enough people are still watching it to warrant it’s continuation. For the life of me, I can’t figure out why. Then again, some people like to listen to Jimmy Buffet music and eat Lima beans.
Some even like doing both.
With all that said, imagine my surprise when I read this morning that Hayden Panettiere, the actress that plays the cheerleader, is supposedly making things difficult on the set by refusing to play nice with Milo Ventimiglia, the actor that plays her uncle on the show. The two were dating in real life (she’s 19 and he’s 31).
She is supposedly refusing to be on set with him.
I think it’s funny when professional actresses don’t act, I don’t know, professional.
Conflux Fat Pack
After work yesterday I bought a Magic The Gathering Conflux Fat Pack at Target. It contained 8 booster packs, a Conflux Players Guide, a 20-sided die, a snazzy looking storage box, a pack of land cards, and the first chapter of Agents of Artiface, an original Magic The Gathering novel.
This is what I got:
Mythic Rares: (1) Malfegor.
Rares: (7) Master Transmuter (x2), Meglonoth, Noble Hierarch, Soul’s Majesty, Sphinx Summoner, Scepter of Insight.
Premiums: (1) – Rotting Rats (Common).
The best card I pulled by far was the Noble Hierarch. The Malfegor was the first Mythic Rare (seeded one per 8 packs) that I’ve pulled from a pack, but it seems somewhat lame.
It’s been a while since I opened a Fat Pack. The last time I did, it came with only six booster packs, but instead of having only a sample chapter of the novel corresponding to the set, it contained the actual entire paperback novel. It all equals out in that two booster packs cost the same as a paperback novel. Then again, I’ve never read a novel I’ve pulled out of a Magic The Gathering fat pack, so maybe I’m much better off just getting two extra booster packs. Plus, I think replacing the paperback novel with two booster packs encourages people to buy more than one Fat Pack. What are people going to do with two copies of the same paperback novel?
I saw Agents of Artiface over at Borders a couple of weeks ago and it’s not a paperback. It’s an actual hardbound book. Wizards of the Coast must have put a lot of faith into the book releasing it as a hardbound.
Howard Stern, consummate company man
I listened to Howard Stern yesterday talk about the format change at his old terrestrial radio station K-Rock. He was taking great pleasure in the fact that Opie and Anthony were let go as a result of the change and how they are “failures”.
Not only was he wrong, it was an extremely inappropriate thing to say. Doesn’t Howard “King of All Media” Stern realize that Opie and Anthony work for the same company that he does? Doesn’t he realize that Sirius XM is trying to get Sirius-only subscribers to sign up for the Best of XM package where one of the main features of the package is the Opie and Anthony Show?
That’s just dumb.
Opie and Anthony are not alone. Howard was dumping on Opera Winfrey on Monday. He said that she should give back some of the money XM paid her when they signed her to an exclusive deal. Is he really in any position to criticize how much anyone else is getting paid by the same company he works for? He makes $100 million a year for a company that is hemorrhaging money. A company that has lost millions of dollars for it’s share holders. On January 9, 2006, the day Howard Stern broadcast his first show on Sirius radio, shares of Sirius stock closed at $6.54.
Today it closed at 16 cents a share.
Maybe Howard Stern shouldn’t be calling anyone else a failure. Maybe instead of trashing the people that work for the same satellite radio company he does, he should be trying to promote them. Contrary to popular belief, just because you enjoy listening to Howard Stern doesn’t mean you can’t enjoy listening to Opie and Anthony and vise versa.
I enjoy listening to both shows. I am far from unique.
Opie and Anthony lose their terrestrial radio gig
Morning radio shock-jocks Opie and Anthony have been let go by CBS radio. The company is doing a complete overhaul to New York City’s K-Rock which as of today, became a Top-40 station.
The two still have their job at Sirius XM. They were doing their K-Rock show from 6am to 9am and they would then trudge over to the XM studios and do a satellite only show till around 11am. Sirius XM was also simulcasting the K-Rock show on satellite.
Though this sucks for Opie and Anthony on a personal financial level, it will make for a better radio show on Sirius XM. Not only will they not have to worry about the FCC, they wont have to adhere to a strict schedule for commercial breaks. That got to be very annoying.
Opie and Anthony were getting good ratings on K-Rock. They weren’t getting Howard Stern ratings, but I doubt Howard Stern would be getting the numbers he got only five years ago on terrestrial radio. It’s a different world today. People buy iPods and they download music online. They buy satellite radios. The people left listening to terrestrial radio are the ones that are too cheap to buy either an iPod or a satellite radio.
I can’t imagine that this demographic is real desirable with advertisers.
Saudi Arabia treats women worse than how Michael Vick treats dogs
This is just disgusting:
A Saudi Arabian court has sentenced a 75-year-old Syrian woman to 40 lashes, four months imprisonment and deportation from the kingdom for having two unrelated men in her house, according to local media reports.
According to the Saudi daily newspaper Al-Watan, troubles for the woman, Khamisa Mohammed Sawadi, began last year when a member of the religious police entered her house in the city of Al-Chamli and found her with two unrelated men, “Fahd” and “Hadian.”
Fahd told the policeman he had the right to be there, because Sawadi had breast-fed him as a baby and was therefore considered to be a son to her in Islam, according to Al-Watan. Fahd, 24, added that his friend Hadian was escorting him as he delivered bread for the elderly woman. The policeman then arrested both men.
Saudi Arabia follows a strict interpretation of Islam called Wahhabism and punishes unrelated men and women who are caught mingling.
The Saudis can blame their religion, but no matter what they do to justify it, there is never a valid reason to beat a 75-year old woman. They treat women worse than people in this county treat animals.
This is just ridiculous. And to think we support this country with our addiction to oil.
Catholic Church excommunicates mother, doctors of 9-year old rape victim who received an abortion
A 9-year-old girl in Brazil was raped by her step-father. When the girl complained of severe stomach pains, he mother took her to the hospital where doctors discovered that she was four months pregnant with twins. Evidently the girl had been sexually assaulted for years by her stepfather. When doctors explained to the girl’s mother that having a twins at such an early age would possibly kill the girl, the mother elected to terminate the pregnancies.
The 9-year-old rape victim received a life-saving abortion.
The Catholic Church responded to the situation by officially excommunicating the mother and doctors. A senior Vatican official defended the action saying that life must always be protected.
What about the step-father? Though he was arrested for raping his 9-year-old step-daughter and possibly her 14-year old handicapped sister, he was not excommunicated by the Catholic Church. The reason? Though the Church views that rape of a 9-year-old to be “a heinous crime”, it’s not as serious as abortion. The Church thinks what the girl’s mother and doctors did was far worse than what the rapist step-father did.
If there was ever a time this poor woman needed the spiritual support that one receives from one’s faith, it has to be now. Instead of supporting her, her church expels her. It’s not as if this woman actually made the choice to have her 9-year old daughter’s pregnancies terminated. This woman had no choice. She no more chose to have the pregnancies aborted than a person chooses to leave a burning building.
The only thing that should change time is a black hole
I hate time changes. Last night at 2:00 a.m. clocks sprung forward by one whole hour. It’s called Day Light Savings time and it’s stupid. I hate it.
I means it doesn’t get dark till later in the day which means it’s easier to bring the crops in or something. Honestly, I have no idea why we engage in Daylight Savings Time. When I’m faced with something silly that doesn’t make any sense, I blame our country’s agricultural roots.
I’m usually right more often then I’m wrong.
It means that instead of having a normal 48-hour weekend, we only had one that was 47 hours long. An hour was taken from us. We won’t get it back till sometime in November. That means when I leave for work tomorrow morning at 7:00 a.m., it will feel like I’m leaving at 6:00 a.m.
Time should be left alone. It shouldn’t be monkeyed with. The only thing in the universe that should be altering time is a black hole.
When it comes to the ending of the ‘Watchmen’ movie, I agree with Hitler (SPOILER ALERT)
We went and watched Watchmen yesterday. Though I absolutely loved the movie, I didn’t care much for the ending. Not because it differed from the ending in the graphic novel (because it did), but because it was flawed.
In the graphic novel, the cold war comes to an immediate end by the introduction of a giant space squid that destroys much of New York City. People realize that they must stop waging war against each other. No matter what our differences are with each other, we have much more in common with each other than we do big giant space squids. The big giant space squid unifies all of mankind.
In the movie, there is no big giant space squid. Instead, a massive bomb based on the same technology that gives Dr. Manhattan his god-like powers is detonated not only in New York City, but in major cities all over the world. Dr. Manhattan is immediately blamed for the attacks that have killed millions. The cold war still ends, but instead of mankind uniting against the threat of giant space squids, it unites against the threat posed by Dr. Manhattan.
And that is where the problem lies.
A giant space squid that destroys much of New York City is neutral. Dr. Manhattan that deploys massive bombs in the world’s major cities is not neutral.
For years Dr. Manhattan has been the poster child of American power. Not only was he once a man, he was an American. Nixon after all used Dr. Manhattan to bring an immediate and swift end to the Vietnam conflict turning it into the 51st state. I’m not so sure the rest of the world would unite with the United States. I’m not sure the the rest of the world would see the United States in the same way that it sees all the other countries attacked by Dr. Manhattan. If anything, Nixon using the power of Dr. Manhattan in Vietnam would have likely united the world against the United States.
That’s not to say that I didn’t love this movie. Jackie Earle Haley as Rorschach ridiculously good. He was born to play the part of Rorschach. His portrayal of Rorschach was truly Oscar worthy.
The level of graphic violence was at the same level with directer Zack Snyder’s other graphic novel adaption, 300. I was somewhat surprised by this. This movie is definitely not a movie for children or the squeamish.
I enjoyed this movie and I’m looking forward to watching it again and again when it’s released on Blu-ray.
The woman who called 911 over her McNuggets
Latreasa Goodman went into her local Florida McDonalds and ordered a $3.49 10-piece chicken McNuggets meal. After the McDonalds employee took her order and her money, Goodman was informed that they had run out of McNuggets. She was told that she would have to choose something else from the menu for the same price. Goodman refused saying she didn’t want anything else and that if she couldn’t have McNuggets, she wanted her money back.
The McDonalds employee told her that McDonalds does not give refunds. Goodman was told that she had to pick something else or get nothing.
Instead of getting angry or belligerent with the McDonalds employee, Goodman did what you are told to do when you are being robbed – she called the police.
She called them by placing not one, but three separate 911 calls.
I actually feel sorry for Latreasa Goodman. I’ve heard the 911 tapes and she sounds calm and collected. She just wanted what she has coming to her; her McNuggets or her money. It doesn’t sounds like a lot to ask. Granted, you aren’t supposed to call 911 over something that isn’t an emergency, but who knows the phone number to their local police department? Not that I would ever call the police. I learned a long time ago that you are better off simply taking care of problems yourself and not involving the police.
I once had a similar problem with McDonalds not giving me something I paid for. It was years ago when I was just a kid and still lived in California. I went through the McDonalds drive-thru right before closing and ordered some burgers. The person at the window took my money and then told me to park up ahead and someone would bring us our food. I pulled up ahead and waited. And I waited. My food never came. I pulled back around to the same drive-thru window and tapped on the glass. The manager came over to the window and instead of giving me my food, yelled that they were closed. I tried to explain that I had been waiting for my food, but she would not listen. She just kept on screaming that they were closed.
Unable to do anything else, I left.
The next weekend, I went back to that same McDonalds and I saw that the same manager was on duty. I then left and went down the street to a payphone. I found the phone number to that McDonalds in the phone book and I placed a call. The manager answered the phone and I explained to her that I was a bus driver hauling a bunch of high school kids back from a band competition. I said that I was about 45 minutes away and that I wanted to give her the heads-up that we would be stopping to eat. She thanked me for the heads-up and said that they would be ready.
I waited an hour and went back to that same McDonalds. At this point in the evening it was around 11:00 p.m. and the dinning room was practically empty. I went to the counter and ordered a Coke. I looked behind the counter and into the kitchen area. There was a massive amount of food ready to be sold. Hamburgers, cheeseburgers, and Big Macs were everywhere growing colder by the minute. The manager — the same woman the week before that refused to even listen to me at the drive-thru window — was visibly angry. I think by this point she realized that there was no bus load of hungry kids coming and that all that food would have to be trashed.
She really should have listened to me the week before.
Sir Ted Kennedy?
From the Daily News:
Prime Minister Gordon Brown revealed Wednesday that Queen Elizabeth is awarding honorary knighthood to Sen. Ted Kennedy, the ailing scion of one of the nation’s most famous and storied political families.
What exactly is the criteria for being a knight? I’m no expert, but shouldn’t a knight be kind of a bad-ass? Granted, thanks to the fact that Ted Kennedy is an American, he immediately moves to the top of the bad-ass list when compared to his fellow knights.
Queen Elizabeth had better hope that a dragon doesn’t show up to unleash holy havoc on the city of London. She’s going to wish she had done things a little differently when she only has the likes of Sir Elton John and Sir David Bowie to send off to fight the dragon.
With that said, good for Ted Kennedy. I’m happy for him. Maybe next he can become a Kentucky Colonel.
Shaq takes a flop
I heard about this listening to the Dan Patrick Show. There are just some things I assumed I’d never see. Shaq taking a dive like he’s a Duke Blue Devil was one of those things.
Early reviews for ‘Watchmen’ movie are trickling in

Watchmen opens this Friday, but reviews are already starting to trickle in over at the movie review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes. Though it currently has an overall T-Meter rating of 73%, looking at only the reviews from the top critics gives it a rating of only 14%.
That’s not good.
Devin Gordon from Newsweek:
Snyder has appropriated Moore’s doomsday themes without any sense of how to animate them. That’s the trouble with loyalty. Too little, and you alienate your core fans. Too much, and you lose everyone — and everything — else.
Anthony Lane from the New Yorker:
Watchmen, like V for Vendetta, harbors ambitions of political satire, and, to be fair, it should meet the needs of any leering nineteen-year-old who believes that America is ruled by the military-industrial complex, and whose deepest fear—deeper even than that of meeting a woman who requests intelligent conversation—is that the Warren Commission may have been right all along.
For what it’s worth, Anthony Lane seems to hate most movies no matter if they are good or not. For instance, he gave Slumdog Millionaire a crappy review and it just won the Oscar for Best Picture. Go figure.
Jonathan R. Burrs for mayor
Being that I’m now living in Williamsport and technically I have to stake in who the city of Hagerstown elects as it’s mayor, I feel like making my opinion in the matter known.
I endorse Republican Jonathan R. Burrs for the mayor of Hagerstown.
I realize that as a card carrying tree hugging liberal, I should probably be endorsing a Democrat if I’m going to meddle in the city politics of Hagerstown. The problem with that is I’ve never really subscribed to the notion that party affiliation matters all that much at the local level. As the mayor of Hagerstown, it doesn’t really mater what his views on gay marriage are or whether or not he supports a woman’s right to choose. Things like this don’t really come up an awful lot when it comes to running a city the size of Hagerstown.
I like the fact that Burrs not only knows what a fiber-optic cable high-speed Internet system is, he believes that it’s in the city’s best interest to establish one as a way of attracting high-tech businesses to the area.
That’s smart.
If you are a Republican living in Hagerstown, I urge you to go to the polls on March 10th and vote for Jonathan Burrs for mayor.
Did scans_daily hurt comic book sales? (Updated)
Over the weekend, the popular LiveJournal comic book community scans_daily was closed down. Members of the community used the site to post pages from comic books so that they as a group could discuss them.
Some are speculating that it was writer Peter David that got the site shut down. He recently went to the site when he discovered that people there were posting pages of his X-Factor #40 and criticizing the storyline. He logged on with his wife’s LiveJournal account and argued with the people that were criticizing his work. He then evidently reported the site to Marvel Comics for copyright infringement:
I told Marvel, yes, without hesitation, because someone posted a link to it over on Comic Book Resources. It was a flagrant copyright violation, it was spreading all over the internet, and I had a personal stake in it. My year-long goal is to try and triple sales on this book; putting up free scans of the entire issue is that thousands of fans can read it without having to pay a dime kneecaps that goal. It’s “Wow, this issue is great, you should go out and buy it” versus “Wow, this issue is great, you should hit this link and read it for free.”
Except people were not putting up scans of the entire issue. From what I can gather, less than half the issue was posted. Also, people weren’t saying this issue is great. In fact, they were kind of saying the complete opposite.
Shortly after that the site was shut down. Peter David claims that he had nothing to do with the site being taken down.
Needless to say, many former members of scans_daily are quite perturbed that their beloved community was taken away from them. Many of them point out that scans_daily is what got them back into buying and reading comics again. They contend that posting images from comic books on scans_daily actually generated more comic book sales. Peter David rejects this argument because he says that during the five years that scans_daily has been around, comic book sales have dropped.
Peter David wrote :
Okay. But I would counter that Scans has been around for five years and during that five years we’ve seen sales overall slide and slide and slide.
Now: Can we prove cause and effect that it’s hurt? No. No more than we can prove that it’s helped. But if you’re trying to make the case that it HAS helped, then based on the steady decline of sales that matches up with how long it’s been around, I think you’ll have a difficult time doing so empirically.
PAD
The problem with what Peter David is saying is that it’s simply not true. Comic sales — both in the amount of money generated and the number of individual copies sold — have increased in the five years since scans_daily has been around.
John Jackson Miller posted the following on Peter David’s blog in the comment section:
2003 73.02 million copies
2004 74.14 million copies
2005 76.13 million copies
2006 81.85 million copies
2007 85.27 million copies
2008 81.34 million copies
I had pointed out in an earlier comment that comic sales had risen during the years that daily_sIt’s important to note that 2008 saw a slight decline in sales volume from the previous year, but the number of comics sold in 2008 is still substantially higher then the number of comics sold before scans_daily came into existence.
Update: Peter David posted on his blog that he was wrong about comic sales decreasing the past five years and he posted the sales figures provided by John Jackson Miller that show this.

The day after I blogged about
President Barack Obama had floor seats this past Friday to see the Washington Wizards host his home team the Chicago Bulls. The president enjoyed a beer and engaged in some 

